Paresh Rawal will beat Arundhati Roy, hands down, in the race to become a worthy human shield – to be tied to an army jeep for fending off the stone-pelters in Kashmir. His stocky body will ensure that the stones don't go past him and damage the army vehicle that my tax money has enabled the government to procure. I care for this dearly bought piece of machinery. The stones will just boomerang off the swathes of fat on Rawal's body and give the stone-pelters a taste of their own medicine. Roy's petite frame will not be an effective shield.
Disgusted? You should be.
His utterances, therefore, cannot be allowed to go unchallenged. Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown. Sensible should be the tongue that swears in the name of the Constitution of India.
Instead of typing 'THE ACTOR, Padma Shri & PARLIAMENTARIAN of INDIA' (sic) in his Twitter bio, Rawal should type ‘troll’. Or better, ‘cyber-bully’. A sitting parliamentarian, in recommending extra-constitutional use of force against a fellow citizen of India, is grossly misappropriating his constitutional privileges. Police in this country have lodged FIRs against common men and women for far less serious online misdemeanours.
The rising number of vigilantism-related cases indicates a spurt of growth in people's tendency to cause violence, directly or through incitement. Like Roy, anybody could be at risk of being tied to a moving jeep, or even dragged by the same. Does a sitting parliamentarian approve of such events? If he does, is he not, then, admitting to the failure of the State machinery of which he is a cog?
Social media is increasingly becoming a space where violence is getting normalised. Despite laws against cyberbullying and threats of violence, such incidents are commonplace. When it comes to female users, an added layer of sexualised violence is added to the existing repertoire of cyber-crime.
Gurmehar Kaur, a 20-year-old student, faced a slew of vicious online attacks, some launched by public figures from all walks of life, for expressing herself.
Is the fault located in the medium or are individuals merely more comfortable now in shedding their superego to unleash a Hobbesian dystopia? Is violence indeed the essence of a human being's constitution?
If an individual, through words or action, threatens the existence of another, it is a criminal offence almost everywhere in the civilised world.
India's schizophrenic democracy, however, sometimes assesses the victim-victimiser relationship purely on the basis of their respective social, political, religious, and gender credentials. Thus, the chances are Rawal will not only be not reprimanded for his loose cannon behaviour, he may be hailed as a right-wing crusader.
Who knows, he may even be the chief minister-designate for an upcoming Assembly election.
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